As the federal government
prepares for Hurricane Florence this week, alarming photos are
raising fresh questions about its response to Hurricane
Maria last year.
The photos, first reported
by CBS Wednesday after going viral on social media the
day before, show potentially millions of water bottles sitting on a runway in
Ceiba, Puerto Rico nearly a year after the storm.
The water bottles were
delivered to Puerto Rico by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA),
Director of Disaster Operations Marty Bahamonde confirmed to CBS.
"If [FEMA] put that water
on that runway there will be hell to pay ... If we did that, we're going to
fess up to it," a senior FEMA official told CBS News' David Begnaud, who
has covered the Maria recovery process extensively.
However, in an interview with CBS Thursday morning, FEMA Deputy
Administrator Daniel Kaniewski defended the placement of the water bottles.
He said they were excess water
bottles not needed during recovery that were taken out of storage and placed on
the runway in January to save money.
"I'm confident that those
that needed those bottles of water got them during the response phase and these
were excess bottles of water that were, again, transferred to save money for
the American taxpayer in January," Kaniewski said.
The bottles were transferred
to the Puerto Rican government in April, Kaniewski said, according to a
transcript of the interview tweeted by Begnaud.
In a video posted on Twitter, Begnaud raised questions
about Kaniewski's answers.
"If you're trying to save
the taxpayer money, why wouldn't you move it to another facility where you
house supplies that can be used in a later disaster?" Begnaud asked.
Puerto Rico Federal Affairs
Administration Executive Director Carlos Mercader confirmed the April transfer
in a statement provided to CBS Wednesday.
According to that statement, a
career official from Puerto Rico's General Services Administration (GSA)
requested the excess water bottles from FEMA on April 17 and the request was
granted April 26.
The GSA claimed about 20,000
pallets of water, CBS reported.
On May 30, the government
collected some of the water bottles from the landing strip and distributed 732
pallets of water between that date and Aug. 12, the statement said.
The government stopped
distributing the bottles when they received complaints about the taste and odor
of the water. The Puerto Rican government then decided to test the bottles and
return them to the federal government.
The water bottles sat on the
runway for four months before being passed off to the Puerto Rican government,
according to Kaniewski 's own account.
Challenging Kaniewski's
timeline is the statement by a member of the Puerto Rico United Forces of Rapid
Action Abdiel Santana, who took the photos of the bottles that began
circulating on social media Tuesday.
He told CBS Wednesday he
originally noticed the bottles last fall and took photos at the time.
Begnaud said on Twitter that blue shows up on satellite images
of the runway starting in January.
The federal government's
response to Hurricane Maria has been in the news in recent weeks after the
Puerto Rican government raised the official death toll from 64 to 2,975 this
August.
In a press conference Tuesday,
President Donald Trump dismissed those criticisms, saying his administration's response to Hurricane Maria
was "incredibly successful."
San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín
Cruz criticized his self-congratulatory tone in an interview Tuesday, CNN reported, saying no public official should ever be
content with everything they did in response to a disaster.
"But the president
continues to refuse to acknowledge his responsibility, and the problem is that
if he didn't acknowledge it in Puerto Rico, God bless the people of South
Carolina and the people of North Carolina," Cruz said.
In a tweet Thursday, Trump
doubled down, denying the accuracy of the revised death toll of nearly 3,000.
"3,000 people did not die
in the two hurricanes that hit Puerto Rico," Trump tweeted.
Cruz tweeted back her vehement
disagreement, The Guardian reported Thursday.
"This is what denial
following neglect looks like: Mr Pres in the real world people died on your
watch. YOUR LACK OF RESPECT IS APPALLING!," she wrote.
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